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Dragonsword #3 7 страница



" I wonder what they ate last, " said Wykla tone-lessly.

" For now, " said Karthin, " I care not about what. I am more concerned with when. "

" I am not sure that it matters. Shall we wake Kyria? "

" It may not be necessary. Let her sleep. "

Squatting down in the ruins, they resumed their watch. A good sprint would take them back to their friends long before the hounds could arrive, and their clear view in all directions precluded a surprise attack; but aside from the movement of the hounds, the fields were still.

Wykla was still nervous. " I am not sure that we two should stay together like this. "

" Agreed. One of us should. . . " Karthin squinted at the fields. " Wait. Look at that. "

" What? The hounds? "

" No. To the right. Near the water. "

Wykla followed his pointing linger, and in a mo­ment she noticed something wrong with the moonlight near the lake. An odd patch had appeared, shimmering with faint light like a piece of dark cloth woven with silver threads. It flickered and pulsed in the air, and as they watched, it brightened and spread slowly until it reached the ground.


" I do not understand, " she said.

" Nor do I. "

" Sorcery. "

" Well, yes. . . "

Dead ruins, strange apparitions. Wykla did not like it at all. " I will run and fetch Kyria, " she said, but when she turned, her sleeve caught on a splintered beam and pulled it down in a clatter of gravel and dry thatch.

The hounds looked up, eyes glowing, mouths grin­ning.

" Curse me for a stupid girl, " Wykla cried. She tugged at the sleeve, but the beam had ground down to the stone beneath it, wedging the cloth firmly be­tween.

Grinning and yelping, the hounds were on their way. Karthin tugged at the snag, shrugged dourly, and cut it away with a knife. " Do not speak unkindly of your­self, dear lady, " he said, and then he turned to the rubble and kicked a passage clear.

They ran for the camp, hair streaming, boots thud­ding on the hard packed ground. " Kyria! " shouted Wykla. " Hounds! "

The camp struggled into consciousness, but the sor­ceress was already on her feet. " Where? "

The cries of the hounds carried clearly through the night air. " Behind us, " said Karthin, pointing.

Kyria nodded and lifted her hands. Moonlight sud­denly wove about her in a bright nimbus, and when the hounds rounded the heaped ruins, they were met by a wave of silver fire. Yelping and whining franti­cally, they tumbled to the ground as though struck by a club. For a moment they scrambled among the weeds, claws furrowing the damp earth, and then they found their feet and fled.

Kyria's voice came out of the shimmering aura that surrounded her. " Enough for a start. But I do not want them running about loose. Let us go and make an end of this. "


The sounds of the beasts' retreat was loud as Kyria and the others made for the ruins, but instead of fading gradually, the whines and frantic yipes cut off of a sudden. When the party reached the ruins, they found only empty fields beyond.

Wykla strained her eyes. " Killed? "

" No... " Kyria rubbed her eyes tiredly, and the nimbus of moonlight faded. " That was not a lethal blast. It was... " She dropped her hands, staring. Out by the lake, the shimmer hung from sky to earth like a doorway into a realm of mist and light. ' 'What in heaven's name is that? "

" It appeared as we watched the hounds, " said Wykla.

" And you did not call me? "

" Dear lady, " said Karthin without apology, " you were asleep. "

Kyria stood with folded arms. Lips pressed to­gether, she watched the shimmer. " Did it do any­thing? "

" Nay. "

" Did the hounds pay any attention to it? "

'' Not that we noticed

" Well, in that case. . . " The sorceress fell silent.

Shaking, Dindrane clutched her healer's staff and stumbled to Kyria's side. " What is it, sister? "

Kyria shook her head. " I cannot be sure. I won­der... " She fell silent, musing, then roused herself suddenly. " Go to bed, all of you. I will watch. "

The others protested, but she shook her head and pointed them back to the camp with an air of authority that sent even Santhe to his blankets without another word. And when Wykla curled up next to Manda, the last thing she remembered before her eyes fell shut was the sorceress standing atop the ruins, her ragged robes gleaming with moonlight and silver and her arms folded as though in defiance of any power, no matter how great, that might threaten those whom she, like Darham, had claimed as her children.


* * *

Helwych's work had been long and taxing, but it was almost done now, and as he lounged back in the king's chair that evening, he allowed himself a brief moment of unalloyed satisfaction.

The backlash from the spell that had created the cur­tain wall had shaken him, but he had recovered quickly enough to immediately set about arranging the magic that had bespelled Seena's children and, to a certain extent, Seena herself. To merely suspend the chil­dren's lives without actually killing them was difficult and exacting work, but he had learned his lessons well, and the results were as he had expected: the queen had put the running of the country into his hands so that she could devote her full attention to the futile task of nursing Ayya and Vill.

Timbrin was gone. She had received the full brunt of the energy backlash, and though her body had not been found, Helwych did not doubt that she had been killed by the blast, if not disintegrated, her remains dragged off by roving hounds.

As a matter of form, he had announced the news of her disappearance, but he had seen no regret in the eyes of the young men in the hall, for they had disliked Timbrin no less than they despised Relys. Now the only four wartroops left in Gryylth were, beneath a veneer of devotion to their queen, loyal only to the young sorcerer they saw as a leader who would bring their country back from the brink of fatal error.

All was going according to plan. His plan. The Specter, on the other hand, was not faring quite so well, for with the erection of the curtain wall, it had been banished from Gryylth. No eyes of void and darkness inhabited Helwych's thoughts now, and what hounds prowled the land were firmly under his con­trol, responding with puppetlike docility to his wishes and orders.

He allowed his mind to stretch out and touch the pack that roamed outside Kingsbury. For an instant,


he saw with the hounds' eyes: moonlit fields, solitary steadings, stone walls and hedges that were nothing to long legs and preternatural muscles. He felt the roiling of empty bellies, the slavering of caustic mouths, the eager ache of needle-sharp fangs.

Not yet. Eat your fill in Deforests and pastures. You will not have human flesh unless I say.

The hounds turned away from the steadings and houses, slipped into the shadows among the trees. But as Helwych brought his awareness back to himself, he felt a brief flash of hostility. Close. Very close. Just outside the very walls of Hall Kingsbury, in fact.

Relys.

" Hmmm. " He opened his eyes. Dryyim stood be­fore him. In the months since Lytham had first brought him to speak with Helwych, he—like his fellows, and with the help of a little magic—had grown from weedy youth to strong manhood. Now Dryyim and his friends swaggered through the market square and barked or­ders like seasoned veterans, and, more important, they followed Helwych's orders without question.

" What was I saying, captain? " said Helwych.

'' The garrisons, lord. "

" Ah, yes. The garrisons. " Helwych considered for a moment. Relys was approaching, and she had mur­der on her mind, but he had time. Time enough to finish the business at hand and then make the neces­sary arrangements. " Tell me, captain, " he said. ' 'What do you want for Gryylth? ''

" I want what is best. '

" And are you loyal to your king and queen? "

" Indeed. "

Fine. Fine. " Seena has put me in charge of Gryylth, " said Helwych smoothly. " It is a terrible responsibility, and my wounds still trouble me, but I will do my best for Gryylth. Have you any question about that? "

Dryyim answered promptly. " None, lord. "

Helwych nodded. " Dryyim, " he said, " you are my


first in command. In matters of war and battle, I listen to you. " Dryyim drew himself up straight, and Helwych felt his pride. " Now, tell me: what garrisons do we have in the land? "

Dryyim enumerated them. With most of the men and arms of Gryylth in Vaylle—trapped now, as Helwych knew—there were only a few: essentially noth­ing more than aging men in administrative posts. Cvinthil had staked everything on a sudden, unex­pected invasion.

" And we have... " Helwych pretended to delib­erate. " How many wartroops left? "

" Four, lord. "

" Ah, yes. Four. I am glad you are with me, Dryyim. I value your counsel. "

Dryyim preened. Helwych felt out towards Relys. The captain of the First Wartroop was approaching the palisade that surrounded the Hall. She greeted the guards at the gate familiarly, and though they did not like her, they allowed her to pass. They had no reason not to.

Helwych smiled. They were about to have a reason. And, he reflected, perhaps some recreation, too.

" Take a few of your men, " he said, " the best, mind you, and send them off to take charge of the garrisons. If Gryylth is going to be put to rights, we need to start work. " Helwych felt rather light-hearted. A palpable thorn was about to be removed from his side. " Bring them to me before they leave, and I will have instruc­tions for them. "

" As you wish, lord. "

Helwych dismissed his guards with a gesture. Gryylth was now his. There remained only a few tasks ahead of him. Mere housekeeping. Nothing of any concern. And as for the question of whether he ruled in his own name or in Cvinthil's, that could be settled much later. For now it was enough that his orders were heeded and his wishes obeyed.

Alone in the dark hall, he rested his staff across his


knees and began to assemble a spell. Though a few months ago it would have been well beyond his abili­ties, the magic had become simple for him; and if he took his time with it this evening, it was because he enjoyed seeing it take shape under his hands.

Murmuring a soft chant under his breath, he cupped his fingers under the spell, cradling it like a bowl of water. It glowed with a life of its own to Helwych's eyes, and when it was done, he sat waiting patiently for Relys.

Stealthily, her steps silent among the rushes on the floor, she approached. The barest flicker of shadow at the doorway indicated that she had entered the Hall, and if Helwych had not possessed the sight of his mind as well as of his eyes, he would never have seen her as she slipped towards him.

He pretended to be dozing. Relys's sword was in her hands. Carefully, she eased into striking range.

But Helwych acted first. With a careless gesture, he flung the spell into her face. The effect was instanta­neous: the captain stood as if struck, dropped her sword, and collapsed amid the rushes.

Helwych regarded her disdainfully for a moment. " Guards, " he said, and then he recalled that, under the circumstances, he should appear more startled. " Guards! " he cried. " Help! "

Dryyim arrived on the run with a half dozen soldiers of the Guard. They stopped just inside the door, looked at Relys in shock, then turned to Helwych.

" She tried to kill me, " said the sorcerer, making sure that he trembled.

Every man present knew that Relys was loyal to Gryylth, and Helwych watched as the guards hesitated between their reason and their resentments. He could have bespelled them, forced them to see matters his own way, but to so seize their loyalties and hold them fast would have meant a constant expenditure of power. He wanted his men's decision to be their own. Much better their allegiance take care of itself.


Dryyim looked to his men. A moment of unspoken communication, decision. . .

And then Dryyim bent and seized Relys by the arms, hauled her to her feet, and cuffed her roughly. " Come to your senses, woman, " he said. " You are under ar­rest. "

Helwych folded his arms inside his sleeves. " In the king's name, " he prompted.

" In the king's name, " said Dryyim.

Relys was still fighting her way out of the spell. She blinked stupidly at the men, at Helwych, at the Hall, then suddenly came to herself and made a lunge for her sword; but the men had already bound her hands behind her back.

She stumbled, was dragged back to her feet; and then the full realization of what had happened fell upon her. Helwych watched her face turn pale as she real­ized that she was bound and friendless.

He rose, feigning weakness. " You have threatened violence against the king's own representative, woman, " he said. " You are guilty of treason. "

" I. . . " Relys was fighting with her fear. She was strong. Too strong. " I am loyal to my king, " she said. " And you are not he. "

" Silence, girl. "



  

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